SAMP OVERVIEW Feb 2015 Dr. Laura Bennion MD CCFP Dip Sport Med Associate Clinical Professor Department of Family Medicine
Today’s goals Learn about examinship, not accrue medical knowledge Common slip-ups Familiarize yourself with format and marking scheme Practice cases
Study Plan Should be well into studying by now Should have a plan Should be studying a few hours each week Use each patient in family med clinic as a practice case Consider group study Have a study space
On-line exam http://cfpc.mcc.ca/StartPa ge.aspx MUST do practice exams on line! http://www.cfpc.ca/certific ation_FAQs/
SAMPs Learning objectives on CFPC.ca Questions are based on this patient case and relate directly to it Questions are based on the basics of family medicine Emphasis on consensus guidelines and general knowledge
SAMPs Two half days: 3 hours each Some cases longer than others ~20-25 cases in the morning, ~20-25 in the afternoon Time management: beware fast exam writers
SAMPs Practice setting will be identified in the question: office, emergency room, inpatient setting
SAMPs Keys Abbreviations are ok except for those not commonly used; if you are not sure, write out the answer Ex: write “Blood culture,” instead of “BC” Generic or trade names acceptable Often more right answers than responses required Only one answer per line will be marked
Keys: No grouped tests CBC is not an answer on this exam Nor are LFTs, lipid panel, elytes, celiac panel, arterial blood gases Break it down into relevant parts Ie: work-up for anemia: hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume…. Ie: work-up for HTN: serum sodium, serum potassium
CBC Liver function tests Electrolytes Lipid panel Arterial blood gases Celiac test
Exceptions: only 2 Urinalysis WBC and differential X-rays: ok to list views Chest x-ray: PA and lateral Knee x-ray: weight bearing, AP, lat, skyline, tunnel
SAMPs keys Website says do not leave boxes empty; if you do not have an answer, write “none” I suggest you guess No negative marks for incorrect answers
SAMP keys Be as specific as possible in your answers: Chest x-ray: PA and lateral Pelvic ultrasound abdominal x-rays: 3 views inferior myocardial infarction Not specific: lifestyle changes toxic appearance
SAMPs Exam committee is made up of family medicine practitioners from across the country, not specialists Questions are meant reflect family MD experience in typical practice (rural or urban)
Suggested Resources CCFP Self Learning modules: avoid MCQ, SAMPs helpful as study tools but are not necessarily consensus information PBSG learning modules (McMaster) are usually consensus information – good resource
SAMPs - Suggested Resources Clinical practice guidelines: Cdn first Textbooks: Canadian and recent Journals e.g. Canadian Family Physician, CMAJ – review articles Websites e.g. cma.ca, ama cpgs Rx Files, Therapeutic Choices Mosby’s (last update 2006 tho) Practice cases
Resources Guide to the Canadian Family Medicine Examination New in 2013 From U of S Available at Amazon.ca or at U of C bookstore
Doses to know ibuprofen, acetaminophen in kids amoxicillin in kids Anaphylaxis in adults and kids STI treatment H. Pylori eradication (1 option) Smoking cessation drugs ACLS drugs
Drugs Know classes, for example: 5 classes of anti-hypertensives 4 classes of anti-depressants 3 classes of anti-HIV drugs 3 classes of anti-migraine meds Know one drug name from each class Usually will not be asked mxm of action
Drugs Common SE/ADRs of common meds: Statins (HMG CoA reductase inhibitors) NSAIDs ACEIs … for ex: cough, hyperK, high Cr HIV meds Migraine meds Anti-depressants ….and more….
What is fair game? The most up-to-date material is fair game on this exam. If you are answering a question based on very new information (ie since Jan 1, 2015), list the source in your answer Ie: as per 2014 Canadian guidelines….
Marking Bell curve Each exam has a different pass point depending on how the examinees perform as a group
What Next? Results in less than 8 weeks Must pass both SAMPs and clinical (SOO, OSCE) Website says there is no established minimum number of points required to earn a pass To me, this means it’s on a bell curve
The Bad News More CCFP exam failures are due to SAMPs in resident group Anyone can fail SAMPs Re-write exam at next sitting: if only fail SAMPs, only re-write SAMPs
Who is at risk? Physicians with busy families, lacking study time Over-confident Fast exam writers/slowest exam writers Those who have trained out of country are at slightly higher risk of failing than Canadian trained physicians
Study Tips Make a plan, stick to it Start studying NOW Look at CCFP learning objectives Create a study group if possible Study with cases in mind MUST do on-line practice SAMPs
Disclaimer I am not on the marking committee We write the cases as best as we can The answer keys may not always agree with your opinion; consensus statements/guidelines are consulted when writing practice exams Not really helpful to debate answer keys
Cases: http://demo.openlabyrinth.ca On-line: still under construction Trial Answer key downloadable at end of exam
GOOD LUCK!